Department Mathematik
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Light and Matter Group

Welcome

to the website of the Light and Matter group. Our research group was established in 2014 as an International Junior Research Group "Interaction between Light and Matter" of the Elitenetwork of Bavaria. We are based at the Mathematical Institute of the LMU Munich in the city of Munich.

Research

Mathematical quantum field theory: Our activities in Mathematical Physics focus on the mathematically rigorous and non-perturbative construction of models of classical and quantum field theory. Much of our efforts are devoted to models that describe the interaction between elementary particles (matter) through electromagnetic interaction (light) and account for the phenomena of radiation reaction and pair creation. We are also highly interested in other topics in Foundations of Physics and its mathematical frameworks.

Mathematical learning theory: As part of the Stochastics Group, our work in Applied Mathematics focuses on the mathematically rigorous study of models of control, planning, and learning tasks that describe how autonomous artefacts or agents can adapt their functionality to unknown data or environments. We are particularly interested in the study of representation and approximation of hypotheses or policies and their performance in terms of statistical guarantees and complexity estimates.

Laws of Nature Series

The Laws of Nature Series is an initiative that seeks to support and encourage the discussion between our communities in Physics, Mathematics, and Philosophy. It is currently organised by A. Bassi, U Trieste, D.-A. Deckert, LMU, Dr. W. Struyve, KU Leven, and P. Reichert-Schürmer, LMU. If you would like to receive announcements of our open online seminar series on Zoom, sign up by email here.

Group Seminar

The Light and Matter group’s weekly working seminar takes place on Mondays from 16:15 to 17:45 in Room B006 at the Mathematical Institute (Theresienstraße 39). The schedule for the Winter Semester 2025/26 can be found below:
Date Speaker Length Title
Oct. 20, 2025 Fabian Nolte 60 min The Dressing of Charged Particles in van-Hove-QFT: Part I
Oct. 27, 2025 Fabian Nolte 90 min The Dressing of Charged Particles in van-Hove-QFT: Part II
Nov. 03, 2025 Siddhant Das 90 min
Absorbing Detectors meet Scattering Theory

Any proposed solution to the "screen problem" in quantum mechanics—the challenge of predicting the joint distribution of particle arrival times and impact positions—must align with the extensive data obtained from scattering experiments. In this paper, we conduct a direct consistency check of the Absorbing Boundary Condition (ABC) proposal, a prominent approach to address the screen problem, against the predictions derived from scattering theory (ST). Through a series of exactly solvable one- and two-dimensional examples, we demonstrate that the ABC proposal's predictions are in tension with the well-established results of ST. Specifically, it predicts sharp momentum- and screen-orientation-dependent detection probabilities, along with secondary reflections that contradict existing experimental data. We conclude that while it remains possible that physical detectors described by the ABC proposal could be found in the future, the proposal is empirically inadequate as a general solution to the screen problem, as it is inconsistent with the behavior of detectors in standard experimental settings. [To appear in Phys. Rev. A; arXiv:2509.07518.]

Nov. 10, 2025 Peter Pickl (LoN) 90 min
Effective Equations - Bridging the Gap between Microscopic and Macroscopic Understanding

In recent years there has been quite some progress in understanding the effective descriptions of interacting many body systems. While finding analytical or numerical solutions for interacting systems of many particles is in many cases impossible with given techniques, physicists use effective, simplified descriptions to describe the main features of the systems. These effective descriptions significantly reduce the complexity of the system by considering only a selected limited number of the degrees of freedom of the system - the macro-variables of the system.

In the talk the most important steps in the derivation of some selected effective equations from microscopic principles will be given. A special emphasis will be the derivation of a time-irreversible macro-dynamics from time-reversible microscopic equations.

Nov. 17, 2025 Paula Reichert-Schürmer 90 min
Entropy and Gravity

There is a lot of confusion about the entropy of gravitating systems. It is often said that the Boltzmann entropy of a classical gravitating system is infinite or not well-defined. In a different vein it is said, and this is presented as a puzzle, that, for a gas in a box, a state of high entropy should be a homogenous state while, for a gravitating system, it should the other way round, a homogenous state being a state of low entropy. We show that both problems can be resolved if one is ready to adapt the notion of the Boltzmann entropy to the context of gravity. To motivate this step, we study the similarities and differences between the Newtonian gravitational N-body system (NBS) and an ideal gas in a box (GB). We explain why a sensible definition of ‘gravitational entropy’ involves an adaption of the Boltzmannian macrovariables. This does not only lead to a well-defined, finite notion of entropy, but it also shows that entropy increases as the N-body system expands while clusters/galaxies form. This last result corroborates Penrose’s conjecture about the long-time behaviour of the entropy of gravitating systems.

Nov. 24, 2025 Canceled
Dec. 01, 2025 Siddhant Das 90 min
Period Dilation and Orbit Contraction in a Uniformly Moving de Broglie-Bohm-Dirac Atom

Related Literature:

Dec. 08, 2025 Tim Maudlin (LoN) 90 min
On the Methodology of Actual Physics

Physicists and philosophers often allow themselves the luxury of contemplating the methodology of a sort of idealized physicist. One such tempting model of how physicists make predictions is provided by Laplace's (or more accurately Bošković's) demon: the complete physical state of the universe at a moment is fed into some fundamental dynamical equation and then one calculates what will-or might-happen. Of course, everyone knows that this is an idealization. The requisite initial condition cannot, in fact, be known. And even if it were, the calculation could not be done. So arriving at actual predictions must involve idealizations and simplifications. But the extent and nature of those idealizations and simplifications has not, I think, been properly acknowledged, especially in the context of quantum-mechanical predictions.

I will consider the problem at a somewhat abstract level, and then make specific remarks about predictions of arrival-place and arrival-time predictions that are based in quantum theory. There, the conceptual foundations of the predictive methods are more shaky and contestable than is generally recognized.

Dec. 15, 2025 Christmas Get-Together
Details (Deviating Time-Slot)

We warmly invite you to join our group for a small Christmas sit-in. There will be Glühwein, punch, and biscuits. Feel free to bring something of your own if you like.

  • Time: 14:00 - 16:00
  • Location: B448 Math Common Room (Theresienstraße 39)

Jan. 12, 2025 Cătălina Curceanu (LoN) 60 min
Challenging Quantum Mechanics Underground: Hunting Collapse Signals and Pauli Principle Violations

Quantum mechanics is the most successful theory of the microscopic world; yet its foundations still pose deep questions. How is the wave function collapsing (the famous measurement problem)? Is the Pauli Exclusion Principle truly inviolable?

In this talk, I will present a series of precision underground experiments at the Gran Sasso National Laboratory (Italy) designed to explore possible deviations from standard quantum mechanics. Using state-of-the-art low-background radiation detectors, we search for two classes of rare signals:

  • spontaneous radiation predicted by collapse models, proposed as solutions to the quantum measurement problem and potentially linked to gravity;
  • Pauli-forbidden atomic transitions, which would indicate a violation of one of the cornerstones of quantum physics.

I will discuss our latest results and future plans for gravity-related collapse tests, as well as broader constraints on Continuous Spontaneous Localization (CSL) models. I will also present the VIP experiment, dedicated to high-sensitivity searches for Pauli Exclusion Principle violations, and highlight how these studies interface with emerging ideas in quantum gravity.

This seminar offers a journey to the deepest underground laboratory and to the frontiers of our understanding of Nature’s laws, and aims to stimulate discussion and foster synergies for future collaborations.

Jan. 19, 2025 Michael Kiessling (LoN) 90 min t.b.a.
Jan. 26, 2025 Vincent Lam (LoN) 90 min t.b.a.
Feb. 02, 2025 Volker Bach (LoN) 90 min Description of Many-Particle Systems by Effective Theories
For further information and regular announcements, please contact Fabian Nolte by email to be added to the mailing list.

Collaborations

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